Catalog
method#Product#Delivery#Qualitative Research#User Research

User Interviews

Qualitative interviews with users to gain insights into needs, goals, and context of use.

User interviews are a qualitative research method to uncover users' needs, motivations, and context.
Established
Medium

Classification

  • Low
  • Business
  • Design
  • Intermediate

Technical context

Zoom or other video tools for recordingDovetail, Notion or Airtable for analysis and synthesisConfluence or internal wikis for result documentation

Principles & goals

Ask open, non-leading questions.Prioritize context over technique: capture behavior before opinion.Ensure systematic recording and structured synthesis.
Discovery
Domain, Team

Use cases & scenarios

Compromises

  • Confirmation bias from non-neutral questioning.
  • Incorrect conclusions from incomplete synthesis.
  • Privacy or consent issues when recording.
  • Use semi-structured guides to ensure comparability and depth.
  • Prioritize short question sets and focus on observations.
  • Summarize interviews promptly and share insights.

I/O & resources

  • Interview guide with goals and core questions
  • Recruited participant profiles
  • Recording or note-taking tools
  • Transcripts or notes with quotes
  • Thematic synthesis and insights
  • Prioritized recommendations for product decisions

Description

User interviews are a qualitative research method to uncover users' needs, motivations, and context. Through structured or semi-structured conversations they yield deep insights into behaviors and pain points. They are especially useful in early discovery, hypothesis validation, and prioritizing user problems.

  • Direct insight into users' needs and motivations.
  • Quick validation of assumptions before investments.
  • Qualitative contextual information for prioritization.

  • Not representative for statistical claims without larger samples.
  • Requires careful recruitment of relevant participants.
  • Result quality depends on the moderator's interviewing skills.

  • Number of validated hypotheses

    Shows how many assumptions were supported or refuted by interviews.

  • Recurring pain points

    Number of distinct users reporting the same problem.

  • Time to actionable insights

    Time from interview to documented, actionable recommendations.

Onboarding Improvement in a FinTech App

Interviews with new users revealed comprehension gaps in identity setup; the team reduced steps and added help text.

Validation of a Payment Feature Hypothesis

Before implementation, interviews showed users prioritized differently than assumed; the feature roadmap was adjusted.

Usability Tests for a B2B Dashboard

User interviews with customer administrators identified recurring navigation misunderstandings; quick wins were prioritized.

1

Formulate goals and research questions.

2

Create participant profiles and recruit.

3

Develop and pilot the interview guide.

4

Moderate and record interviews.

5

Transcribe, code, and synthesize thematically.

6

Communicate insights and translate into product decisions.

⚠️ Technical debt & bottlenecks

  • Lack of structure for storing and reusing interview insights.
  • Incomplete or non-standardized transcripts hinder analysis.
  • No clear ownership for following up on recommendations.
Recruitment of suitable participantsCapacity for analysis and synthesisModeration and documentation skills
  • Using interviews to confirm internal assumptions without open questions.
  • Interview colleagues as proxies instead of real users.
  • Not documenting interview data and thus losing knowledge.
  • Using too small or homogeneous samples for generalized claims.
  • Over-interpreting results without cross-checking quantitative data.
  • Lack of participant diversity leads to biased insights.
Interview moderation and questioning techniquesAnalysis of qualitative data and pattern mappingEmpathy and active listening
User-centeredness in product decisionsEvidence-based prioritizationCross-functional collaboration of design and product
  • Observe privacy and consent when recording.
  • Participants' availability may be limiting.
  • Plan budget for recruitment and incentives.